17 listopada 2009 - Forum Europy Środkowej w Bratysławie

17 listopada 2009 - Forum Europy Środkowej w Bratysławie

Krzysztof Czyżewski wziął udział w konferencji Forum Europy Środkowej w Bratysławie.

Central European Forum Agenda

Opening (17.11., 10.00am) 
Rudolf Chmel, Central European Forum Board member 
Andrej Ďurkovský, the Mayor of Bratislava 

Panel I 
Where does the West begin (17.11., 10.20 am – 1.00 pm ) 
Central Europe as a border zone - where are the boundaries of Europe and Europeanness? What is the future of this region between the East and the West? 
Martin Bútora (Bratislava), Aleš Debeljak (Ljubljana), Viktor Erofeyev (Moscow), Wendy Luers (New York), Andrzej Stasiuk (Wołowiec), Karel Schwarzenberg (Prague) 

Exhibition Opening (17.11., 1.00 pm) 
Exhibition of photographs by Peter Župník 

Refreshments for Central European Forum participants and wider public 

Panel II 
Open Society in Crisis (17.11., 2.00 pm – 4.45 pm) 
Twenty years ago much of Central Europe rediscovered the free market. What are the chances of sustaining freedom and democracy at a time of a faltering global capitalism? 
Mary Kaldor (London), Paul Lendvai (Vienna), Tomáš Sedláček (Prague), Brigita Schmögnerová (Bratislava – London), Vladimir Gligorov (Vienna) 

Panel III 
Totalitarian structures – A New Lease of Life (18.11., 10.00 am – 1.00 pm) 
Has Central Europe shed the shackles of the past? Is it possible, twenty years on, to get a grip on the past without getting entangled in its web again? What are the risks of drawing a firm line under the past? What are the risks of searching for historical truth? 
Adam Michnik (Warsaw), Timothy Snyder (Yale University), Martin M. Šimečka (Bratislava), Gyorge Konrád (Budapest), Marci Shore (Yale University, Maciej Zaremba (Stockholm), Thierry Chervel (Berlin), Slavenka Drakulić (Zagreb – Vienna) 

Panel IV 
Democracy Fatigue (18.11., 2.30 pm – 5.30 pm) 
How solid are democratic institutions such as independent media, human rights and minority rights, and civic society twenty years after November 1989? What are the greatest threats to these institutions? Is it the resurgence of old and the emergence of new corruption and capitalism? 
Krzysztof Czyżewski (Sejny), Václav Havel (Prague), Ágnes Heller (Budapest – New York), Ivan Krastev (Sofia), Ingo Schulze (Berlin), Miroslav Kusý (Bratislava), Jacques Rupnik (Paris)

Obszerna relacja z tego spotkania dostępna jest w języku angielskim.
Więcej informacji 
http://www.ceeforum.eu/